Health Law's Employer Mandate Hits Another Speed Bump

The Obama Administration is, again, delaying implementation of a part of the Affordable Care Act that requires employers to provide health insurance to their workers (or, potentially, face penalties). But this time it's not the entire "employer mandate" that's being delayed (as it was in 2013) just part.

For most businesses affected by the law (firms with fewer than 50 workers are exempt), the employer provisions will go into effect, as scheduled, on Jan. 1, 2015. The companies will, however, get a small bit of relief. For the first year they will only have to offer coverage to 70 percent of their full-time employees, rather than 95 percent, as was originally written. Under the "final rules" issued by the Treasury Department, the 95 percent requirement won't kick in until 2016.

The biggest change announced Monday, however, offers a reprieve to not-quite-small businesses firms that employ between 50 and 99 workers. These companies will get an additional year until Jan. 1, 2016 to meet the coverage requirements, if they promise neither to shed employees, nor cut an employee's hours to get their firm into that 99-worker category.

"For the two percent of American businesses that have between 50 and 99 employees, the Treasury Department concluded that a phase-in was the most common-sense way to implement the law," says White House health policy advisor Phil Schiliro.

Republicans were quick to blast the Administration for selective implementation of the law.

"Once again, the President is rewriting law on a whim," said House Speaker John Boehner a written statement.

Sean Spicer, communications director for the Republican National Committee, was more direct. "I think there is a huge bit of irony," he told NPR, "that the administration and Democrats in Congress accused Republicans of trying to undo a law that they have unilaterally continued to undo or delay, week after week, as they have recognized how unpopular it is throughout the country."

But not everyone sees the move as purely political. Neil Trautwein, of the National Retail Federation, says his group is grateful for the new flexibility the rules provide.

Trautwein says the Obama administration has "proactively decided to address what appears to be a problem that being the accommodation of some not very large businesses to the ACA, and the idea that you can't flip a light switch and instantly become compliant."

But the new rules also, conveniently, push back until well after the 2014 elections some of the difficult changes that some of those mid-size businesses may have to make.